Array Substrate for Display Device and Manufacturing Method Thereof

ABSTRACT

The present disclosure provides an array substrate for a display device and a manufacturing method thereof. A transparent electrode pattern (ITO) may be formed between a source/drain metal pattern and a passivation layer located above the source/drain metal pattern, which are formed in a passivation hole area of a non-active area of the array substrate. Accordingly, it may be possible to prevent display failure caused by a delamination phenomenon or peel-off of a material of the passivation layer due to the lack of adhesion strength between a metal layer and the passivation layer in the passivation hole area.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims priority from and the benefit of Korean PatentApplication No. 10-2014-0046151, filed on Apr. 17, 2014, which is herebyincorporated by reference for all purposes as if fully set forth herein.

BACKGROUND

1. Field of the Invention

Embodiments of the present invention relate to an array substrate for adisplay device and a manufacturing method thereof. More particularly,the embodiments of the present invention relate to an array substratefor a display device and a manufacturing method thereof, which canprevent problems due to the damage of a passivation layer in apassivation hole area formed on a Source/Drain (S/D) metal pattern in anon-active area.

2. Description of the Related Art

With the progress of an information-oriented society, demands fordisplay devices for displaying images have increased in various forms.Recently, various display devices, such as a Liquid Crystal Display(LCD), a Plasma Display Panel (PDP), and an Organic Light Emitting DiodeDisplay (OLED) device, have been utilized.

Among these display devices, a Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) devicetypically includes an array substrate including a Thin Film Transistor(TFT), which is a switching element for controlling on/off of each pixelarea; an upper substrate including a color filter and/or a black matrix,etc.; a display panel including a liquid crystal material layer formedbetween the array substrate and the upper substrate; and a driving unitfor controlling the TFT. In such an LCD device, an alignment state ofthe liquid crystal layer is controlled according to an electric fieldapplied between a pixel (PXL) electrode and a common voltage (Vcom)electrode provided in a pixel area, and thereby the transmittance oflight is adjusted to allow an image to be displayed.

In the array substrate, an Active Area (AA) and a Non-active Area (NA)may be defined. The Active Area includes one or more pixels whichdisplay an image. Multiple gate lines GL and multiple data lines DLintersect to define Pixels (P) on an inner surface of the active area ofthe array substrate, which is typically referred to as a “lowersubstrate,” and each of the intersections between the gate lines and thedata lines may be provided with a TFT that is respectively connected ona one-to-one ratio to a transparent pixel electrode formed in each pixelP.

On the array substrate, multiple layers, such as a gate metal layer, asemiconductor layer, a source/drain metal layer, a pixel electrodelayer, a common electrode layer, and the like, may be formed in order toform the TFTs and the wire lines, and an inter-layer insulating layerfor insulation between layers or a protection layer for protecting eachlayer may be formed.

There is also a Twisted Nematic (TN) mode, in which an array substratehaving a pixel electrode formed thereon and an upper substrate having acommon voltage electrode formed thereon are separated from each other, aliquid crystal material is injected between the array substrate and theupper substrate, and liquid crystal molecules in a nematic phase aredriven in a direction vertical to the substrates. However, an LCD deviceof the above-described TN mode may be disadvantageous due to its narrowviewing angle of about 90 degrees.

In contrast, there is an LCD device of functioning in an In-PlaneSwitching (IPS) mode, where liquid crystal molecules may be driven in adirection horizontal to the substrates, thereby improving a viewingangle by more than 170 degrees. The LCD devices using IPS mode (inwhich, basically, a pixel electrode and a common voltage electrode maybe simultaneously formed on a lower substrate or an array substrate) maybe divided into a type in which both the pixel electrode and the commonvoltage electrode are formed in an identical layer, and a Fringe FieldSwitching (FFS) type in which both electrodes are formed spaced apartfrom each other in a horizontal direction in a state of interposing oneor more insulating layers, and where one electrode has a finger shape.

Further, a connection pad for connection to a driving unit disposed atan inner or outer portion of the array substrate, a signal applicationpad for applying a reference voltage or reference signals, various padsfor measurement, and the like, may be formed on a part of the non-activearea outside the active area in the array substrate.

In the non-active area, multiple passivation holes or multiplepassivation contact holes may be formed by opening parts of aninsulating layer or a passivation layer located on an S/D metal layerlaminated on the array substrate.

The passivation hole may be an aperture that exposes an S/D metalpattern due to the removal of a part of a passivation layer or aninsulating layer laminated on an S/D metal pattern. In order to protectthe exposed S/D metal pattern, another additional passivation layer maybe formed on the passivation hole.

In the case of the passivation hole formed on the S/D metal pattern asdescribed above, adhesion strength is weakened between the S/D metalpattern layer in a passivation hole area and the additional passivationlayer, which is laminated on the S/D metal pattern layer so as tocontact the S/D metal pattern layer. Thus, a delamination phenomenon mayoccur between both contact layers. Further, a foreign material peel-offphenomenon, in which a part of an upper passivation layer is peeled off,may occur during an additional process.

When the delamination phenomenon occurs between the S/D metal layer andthe additional passivation layer located on the S/D metal layer in thepassivation hole area, the accuracy of measurement may be reduced. Forexample, when the foreign material generated from the passivation layerby the foreign material peel-off phenomenon enters the active area andis fixed to the active area, display failures such as a pixel defect ora hot pixel (or the like) may occur.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

An aspect of the present invention is to provide an array substrate fora display device and a manufacturing method thereof, which can solveproblems due to the lack of adhesion strength of a metal pattern and apassivation layer located above the metal pattern in a passivation holearea formed in a non-active area of a display panel.

Another aspect of the present invention is to provide an array substratefor a display device and a manufacturing method thereof, which canprevent a delamination phenomenon and a foreign material peel-offphenomenon of a passivation layer in a passivation hole area by forminga transparent electrode pattern (ITO) between an S/D metal pattern andthe passivation layer located above the S/D metal pattern which areformed in the passivation hole area.

Still another aspect of the present invention is to provide an arraysubstrate for a display device and a manufacturing method thereof,which, in a display panel wherein a lower transparent electrode and anupper transparent electrode are all disposed on an array substrate, canprevent a delamination phenomenon and a foreign material peel-offphenomenon of a passivation layer in a passivation hole area by forminga lower transparent electrode layer as an S/D cover layer on an S/Dmetal pattern formed in the passivation hole area of a non-active area,and by laminating the passivation layer on the lower transparentelectrode layer.

In order to solve the above-mentioned technical problems, in accordancewith an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method ofmanufacturing an array substrate for a display device. The methodincludes: a first step of forming a Gate Insulator (GI), a Source/Drain(S/D) metal pattern, and a lower passivation layer in a passivation holearea disposed in a non-active area; a second step of exposing the S/Dmetal pattern by removing the lower passivation layer in the passivationhole area; a third step of forming a lower transparent electrode patternas an S/D cover layer on the exposed S/D metal pattern in thepassivation hole area; and a fourth step of forming an upper passivationlayer on the lower transparent electrode pattern in the passivation holearea.

In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, there isprovided an array substrate for a display device that has a non-activearea including a passivation hole area and an active area. The arraysubstrate includes: an active area including a Thin Film Transistor(TFT) area in which a gate metal pattern, a Gate Insulator (GI), asemiconductor layer, a Source/Drain (S/D) metal pattern, a lowerpassivation layer, a lower transparent electrode layer, an upperpassivation layer, and an upper transparent electrode layer aresequentially disposed; and a non-active area including a passivationhole area in which the GI, a Source/Drain (S/D) metal pattern, a lowertransparent electrode pattern as a cover layer of the S/D metal pattern,and the upper passivation layer are sequentially disposed.

In accordance with still another aspect of the present invention, thereis provided a method of manufacturing an array substrate for a displaydevice that has a non-active area including a passivation hole area andan active area. The method includes: forming a gate metal pattern on thearray substrate, and forming a Gate Insulator (GI) on the gate metalpattern; depositing a semiconductor layer and a Source/Drain (S/D) layeron the Gate Insulator, and forming an S/D metal pattern in both theactive area and the non-active area by a photolithography process usingone or more masks; depositing a lower passivation layer, and forming apassivation hole by removing a part of the lower passivation layer inthe passivation hole area; depositing a lower transparent electrodelayer, and patterning a lower transparent electrode pattern so as toform the lower transparent electrode pattern on the S/D metal pattern inthe passivation hole area by using a lower transparent electrode mask;and forming an upper passivation layer on an entire surface of the arraysubstrate.

According to an embodiment of the present invention, a transparentelectrode pattern for increasing adhesion strength may be formed betweenan S/D metal layer and a passivation layer located above the S/D metallayer in an inorganic passivation hole (PAS hole) area or an organicpassivation hole (PAC hole) area formed on a metal pattern such as theS/D metal layer. Accordingly, it may be possible to prevent displayfailure due to a delamination phenomenon or peel-off of a material of apassivation layer, which are caused by the lack of adhesion strength ofa metal layer and the passivation layer in the passivation hole area.

For example, use is made of an organic insulating layer or an organicpassivation layer (PAC) formed of an organic material, such asphoto-acryl or the like. In a display panel where a pixel transparentelectrode or a common voltage transparent electrode are simultaneouslydisposed on an array substrate, a transparent electrode pattern isformed between an S/D metal layer and a passivation layer located abovethe S/D metal layer in a passivation hole (PAC hole) area of anon-active area. Accordingly, various problems can be solved which occurwhen adhesion strength between an S/D metal layer and a passivationlayer located on the metal layer is weakened due to an oxide layerformed in the S/D metal layer included in a pad for measurement in aprocess of dry-etching the organic passivation layer. Therefore, it maybe possible to increase yield of liquid crystal display panels, and areduction in failure rate thereof.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The above and other objects, features and advantages of embodiments ofthe present invention will be apparent from the following detaileddescription taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, inwhich:

FIGS. 1A and 1B are a plan view and a cross-sectional view,respectively, illustrating an array substrate of a liquid crystaldisplay panel to which an embodiment of the present invention isapplied;

FIG. 2A is an enlarged plan view illustrating a passivation hole area,to which an embodiment of the present invention may be applied, andFIGS. 2B to 2D are enlarged cross-sectional views each illustrating thepassivation hole area, to which an embodiment of the present inventionmay be applied;

FIGS. 3 and 4 illustrate an overall flow of a method of manufacturing anarray substrate for a liquid crystal display panel according to anembodiment of the present invention, in which FIG. 3 is a flowchartillustrating a process focusing on a passivation hole area and FIG. 4 isa flowchart illustrating an overall process of manufacturing the arraysubstrate;

FIGS. 5A to 5E are cross-sectional views in a process of manufacturingan array substrate according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIGS. 6A and 6B are plan views illustrating an array substratemanufactured according to an embodiment of the present invention, andFIGS. 6C and 6D are cross-sectional views illustrating the arraysubstrate manufactured according to an embodiment of the presentinvention; and

FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view illustrating a passivation hole areaaccording to another embodiment of the present invention, andillustrates an example applied to an LCD device of a Pixel-On-Top (POT)type.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS

Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described indetail with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the followingdescription, the same or similar elements will be designated by the samereference numerals to indicate the same or similar parts. Further, inthe following description of embodiments of the present invention, adetailed description of known functions and configurations incorporatedherein may be omitted when it may make the subject matter of embodimentsof the present invention rather unclear.

In addition, terms such as first, second, A, B, (a), (b) or the like maybe used herein when describing components of embodiments of the presentinvention. Each of these terminologies is not used to define an essence,order or sequence of a corresponding component but used merely todistinguish the corresponding component from other component(s). In thecase that it is described that a certain structural element “isconnected to”, “is coupled to”, or “is in contact with” anotherstructural element, it should be interpreted that another structuralelement “may be connected to”, “be coupled to”, or “be in contact with”the structural elements as well as that the certain structural elementis directly connected to or is in direct contact with another structuralelement.

FIGS. 1A and 1B are a plan view and a cross-sectional view,respectively, illustrating an array substrate of a liquid crystaldisplay panel to which an embodiment of the present invention isapplied.

An array substrate of a liquid crystal display device, to which anembodiment of the present invention may be applied, may include anActive Area (AA) 11 including pixels 15 respectively formed in areaswhere multiple gate lines 13 and multiple data lines 14 intersect, and aNon-active Area (NA) 12 outside the active area.

Each pixel 15 has one or more TFTs formed therein, and includes a pixelelectrode of a transparent conductive material connected to a drainelectrode included in the TFT.

Meanwhile, as briefly described above, modes of the LCD device include aTwisted Nematic (TN) mode, a Vertical Alignment (VA) mode, an In-PlaneSwitching (IPS) mode, and a Fringe Field Switching (FFS) mode, accordingto schemes of adjusting the alignment of the liquid crystal layer. Inthe IPS and FFS modes, a pixel electrode and a common electrode aredisposed on a lower substrate, and the alignment of the liquid crystallayer is adjusted by an electric field generated by a voltage differencebetween the pixel electrode and the common electrode.

In the IPS mode, pixel electrodes and common electrodes are alternatelyarranged in parallel, thereby a lateral electric field is generatedbetween the pixel electrodes and the common electrodes, and thealignment of the liquid crystal layer is adjusted. In the IPS mode, thealignment of the liquid crystal layer is not adjusted in an upperportion over the pixel electrode and the common electrode, and thus thetransmittance of light decreases in an area corresponding to the upperportion.

The FFS mode has been developed to solve the disadvantages of the IPSmode. In the FFS mode, a pixel electrode and a common electrode areformed spaced apart from each other with an insulating layertherebetween, wherein one electrode is formed in the shape or pattern ofa plate, and the other electrode is formed in the shape of a finger,thereby adjusting the alignment of the liquid crystal layer through afringe field generated between the two electrodes.

It may be desirable that the LCD device according to an embodiment ofthe present invention has the structure of the above-described FFS modeLCD device. However, embodiments of the present invention are notlimited thereto.

Also, the LCD device to which an embodiment of the present invention isapplied may include the array substrate, and a back light unit and adriving circuit unit that provide light to the liquid crystal panel. Thedriving circuit unit includes a timing controller (T-con), a data driver(D-IC), a gate driver (G-IC), a backlight driving unit, and a powersupply unit that supplies driving power to the driving circuits.Further, the whole or part of the driving circuit unit may be formed onthe liquid crystal panel by a Chip On Glass (COG) method or a Chip OnFlexible printed circuit or Chip On Film (COF) method, and a descriptionof detailed configurations of the back light unit, the driving circuitunit, and the like will be omitted.

In the cross-sectional view illustrated in FIG. 1B, as the LCD device towhich an embodiment of the present invention may be applied, an exampleof so-called Vcom-On-Top (VOT) from among the FFS modes is illustratedin which a common voltage electrode or common electrode (Vcom) islocated at the uppermost part of the array substrate or the lowersubstrate.

However, embodiments of the present invention are not limited to the LCDdevice of the VOT type and FFS mode. The LCD device of the VOT type andFFS mode will be described in more detail below.

Also, in an example of the array substrate to which an embodiment of thepresent invention may be applied, a lower first inorganic passivationlayer (PAS1), an organic passivation layer (PAC) on the PAS1, and asecond inorganic passivation layer (PAS2) on the PAC may be used as apassivation layer.

The inorganic passivation layer may be formed of an inorganic insulatingmaterial, such as silicon nitride (SiN_(x)), silicon oxide (SiO₂), orthe like, and the organic passivation layer may be formed of a materialsuch as photo-arcryl, acrylate, polyamide, or the like. However,embodiments of the present invention are not limited thereto.

A cross section of the array substrate to which an embodiment of thepresent invention may be applied will now be described in more detail.First, a gate metal layer is formed on a substrate such as an organicsubstrate, and a gate metal layer or a gate metal pattern including agate electrode 182 is formed from the gate metal layer by a patterningprocess which includes a photolithographic process and uses a gate mask.

A Gate Insulator (GI) is formed on the gate metal layer, a semiconductorlayer 184 forming a channel of a TFT is formed on the GI, and an S/Dmetal layer or an S/D metal pattern, which includes a source electrode185 and a drain electrode 186, is formed on the semiconductor layer 184.

Meanwhile, while the gate metal layer, the GI, the semiconductor layer,and the S/D metal layer are formed in a TFT portion in the active areaas described above, a GI, a semiconductor layer 184′, and an S/D metalpattern 185′ may be formed on the substrate in a passivation hole area(the right part of FIG. 1B) of the non-active area, to which anembodiment of the present invention may be applied.

In this state, a first inorganic passivation layer (PAS1) 187 and anorganic passivation layer (PAC) 188 are sequentially laminated on theS/D metal pattern 185′, and holes are formed by removing a part of thePAS1 187 and that of the PAC 188 through a photo process using apassivation layer mask, and the like.

For example, a drain contact hole 200 for connecting the drain electrode186 to a pixel electrode 189 is formed in the TFT area of the activearea, and a passivation hole 300 is formed in the non-active area by anidentical process.

Meanwhile, in the active area, the pixel electrode 189 is formed bylaminating/patterning a pixel electrode layer of a transparent electrodematerial on the PAC 188, and the pixel electrode 189 is electricallyconnected to the drain electrode 186 through the above-described draincontact hole 200.

However, during the process of patterning the pixel electrode layer, apixel electrode pattern may not be formed in the non-active area,particularly, in an area of the passivation hole 300 of the non-activearea. Accordingly, a second inorganic passivation layer (PAS2) 190 islaminated on the exposed S/D metal pattern 185′ of the area of thepassivation hole 300 so as to contact the exposed S/D metal pattern185′.

FIG. 2A is an enlarged plan view illustrating a passivation hole area towhich an embodiment of the present invention may be applied, and FIGS.2B to 2D are enlarged cross-sectional views each illustrating thepassivation hole area to which an embodiment of the present inventionmay be applied.

As seen from the plan view, multiple passivation holes 16 s may beformed in the non-active area, and an area in which the multiplepassivation holes 16 s are grouped may be defined as a passivation holegroup area 17.

When each of the passivation holes 16 is seen from the cross section, asillustrated in FIG. 2B, an organic substrate 181, a GI 183, thesemiconductor layer 184′, and the S/D metal pattern 185′ are formed froma lower part, and the PAS1 187 and the PAC 188 are laminated on the S/Dmetal pattern 185′. Then, the passivation hole 300 is formed by removinga part of the two passivation layers, and the PAS2 190 is laminated onthe passivation hole 300.

As can be noted from this cross-sectional structure, the S/D metalpattern 185′ directly contacts the PAS2 190 in the area of thepassivation hole 300. The S/D metal layer is typically formed of a metalmaterial having low resistance, such as copper (Cu), copper alloy,aluminum (Al), aluminum alloy (AlNd), or the like, and the PAS2 istypically formed of an inorganic insulating material, such as nitrideoxide (SiN_(x)) or the like. Accordingly, adhesion strength between thecontact materials is weakened due to the heterogeneity of the contactmaterials.

Particularly, as illustrated in FIG. 2C, in order to form thepassivation hole 300, the PAS1 187 and the PAC may be laminated, a photoprocess is performed, and dry etching is performed in order to removepassivation layers of a portion corresponding to the passivation hole300. While the S/D metal pattern 185′ exposed by the dry etching processis exposed to plasma, a metal oxide layer 185″ of a predeterminedthickness may be formed. For example, when the S/D metal layer is formedof copper (Cu), a copper oxide (CuO) layer which is an oxidized layermay be formed on the S/D metal layer.

Due to the metal oxide layer 185″, adhesion strength between the metaloxide layer 185″ and the PAS2 190 deposited on the metal oxide layer185″ may be weakened. Accordingly, as illustrated in FIG. 2D, adelamination phenomenon of a junction surface between the S/D metalpattern 185′ and the PAS2 190 located above the S/D metal pattern 185′may occur in the passivation hole area. Due to the delaminationphenomenon of the junction surface, a part of the PAS2 190 may be peeledoff, as a passivation foreign material 190′, from the PAS2 190.

As described above, damage in the passivation hole area is caused by thedelamination phenomenon of the junction surface which has occurred dueto the lack of the adhesion strength of the S/D metal pattern and thepassivation layer located above the S/D metal pattern in the passivationhole area. For example, when the passivation foreign material 190′generated at this time enters the active area and is fixed thereto whilea subsequent process is performed, the passivation foreign material 190′may cause a hot pixel or the like in the active area. Accordingly, theyield of array substrates may be reduced as a whole.

The above-described phenomenon occurs because, in the process ofmanufacturing the array substrate, a pixel electrode layer is formed andthen a pixel electrode pattern is not generated in the passivation holearea of the non-active area during a process of patterning the pixelelectrode pattern. This is because the passivation hole area of thenon-active area is not patterned by using the PAC mask. and does nothave the pixel electrode pattern formed therein When a passivation holeis formed in the PAS1 and the PAC, a pixel electrode layer of atransparent conductive material is deposited on the entire substrate,and a photolithography process is performed in which, after aphotoresist which is a photosensitive material is coated on the pixelelectrode layer, the coated photoresist is exposed to light by using aPAC mask and is developed.

In this regard, an embodiment of the present invention may provide amethod which, in order to solve the above-described problems, prevents adelamination phenomenon due to the lack of adhesion strength of an S/Dmetal pattern and a passivation layer in the passivation hole area, andprevents the failure of the display device due to a passivation foreignmaterial, by forming a lower transparent electrode pattern as a coverlayer of the S/D metal pattern between the S/D metal pattern and thepassivation layer located above the S/D metal pattern in the passivationhole area of the non-active area of the array substrate included in theLCD panel.

FIGS. 3 and 4 illustrate an overall flow of a method of manufacturing anarray substrate for a liquid crystal display panel according to anembodiment of the present invention, in which FIG. 3 is a flowchartillustrating a process focusing on a passivation hole area, and FIG. 4is a flowchart illustrating an overall process of manufacturing thearray substrate.

With reference to FIG. 3, according to an embodiment of the presentinvention, a method of manufacturing a display panel that includes anon-active area including a passivation hole area and an active area,and has a gate metal pattern, a GI, a semiconductor layer, an S/D metallayer, a lower passivation layer, a lower transparent electrode layer,an upper passivation layer, and an upper transparent electrode layersequentially formed in a TFT area of the active area, may include afirst step S310 of forming a GI, an S/D metal pattern, and a lowerpassivation layer in the passivation hole area; second step S320 ofexposing the S/D metal pattern by removing the lower passivation layerin the passivation hole area; a third step S330 of forming a lowertransparent electrode pattern as an S/D cover layer on the exposed S/Dmetal pattern in the passivation hole area; and a fourth step S340 offorming a PAS2 as a upper passivation layer on the lower transparentelectrode pattern in the passivation hole area.

According to an embodiment of the present invention, the lowerpassivation layer may be a double passivation layer including a PAS1 anda PAC. However, embodiments of the present invention are not limitedthereto. Accordingly, the lower passivation layer may include only oneor more inorganic passivation layers.

Hereinafter, a case will be described as an example in which a lowerpassivation layer includes a PAS1 and a PAC.

FIGS. 5A to 5E are cross-sectional views in the process of manufacturingthe array substrate as illustrated in FIG. 3. Hereinafter, a detailedconfiguration of each process will be described in detail with referenceto FIG. 3 through FIGS. 5A to 5E.

First, in process S310 illustrated in FIG. 3, as illustrated in FIG. 5A,a gate metal pattern including a gate electrode 515 is formed on a glasssubstrate 510, a GI 520 is formed on the entire substrate surface on thegate metal pattern, and a semiconductor layer pattern 530 and an S/Dmetal pattern are formed on the GI 520.

The semiconductor layer pattern and the S/D metal pattern may be formedin both the TFT area (the left part in each of FIGS. 5A to 5E) of theactive area and the passivation hole area (the right part in each ofFIGS. 5A to 5E) of the non-active area. The S/D metal pattern formed inthe active area includes a source electrode 542 and a drain electrode544 that are connected to a data line (not illustrated).

The semiconductor layer pattern 530 and the S/D metal pattern 540 mayalso be formed in the passivation hole area of the non-active area.According to circumstances, the semiconductor layer pattern 530 may notbe formed in the passivation hole area of the non-active area.

With reference to FIG. 4, process S310 illustrated in FIG. 3 will bedescribed in more detail below.

First, as a process of forming a gate metal pattern, in step S405, agate metal layer is deposited on the entire glass substrate 510, andthen a gate metal pattern including a gate electrode 515 or the like ispatterned by a photolithography process and an etching process using agate mask or the like.

The photolithography process may be used to pattern the deposited layerto a pattern of a predetermined shape. In the photolithography process,a photoresist having photosensitivity is coated on the deposited layer,the photoresist is exposed to light such as ultraviolet rays or the likein a state of disposing a predetermined patterned mask on thephotoresist (a photo process), and the photoresist is developed. As aresult, only a photoresist layer corresponding to the mask patternremains. In this state, a material of a part of the layer at which thephotoresist does not remain is removed by a process such as dry etching,wet etching, or the like, and thereby only a part of the layer at whichthe photoresist is left unremoved remains.

A pattern corresponding to the pattern of the relevant mask may beformed on the relevant layer by the above-described processes. A type inwhich a part (an ultraviolet ray shield part) which is not exposed toultraviolet rays by the mask is formed as a pattern, is a positive type.In contrast, a type in which a part (a light penetration part) exposedto light is formed as a pattern, is a negative type.

Hereinafter, the formation of a pattern on a predetermined layer by thephotolithography process will be referred to as “processes ofdeposition, (light) exposure and etching.”

Examples of the gate metal pattern patterned in step S405 may includethe gate electrode 515 in the TFT area, a gate line (not illustrated) inthe active area, a gate pad in the non-active area, a common electrodeline (a Vcom line), or the like. However, the gate metal patternpatterned in step S405 may not be formed in the passivation hole area.

The gate metal pattern may be formed of one or more materials selectedfrom metals having low resistance, such as copper (Cu), copper alloy,aluminum (Al), aluminum alloy (AlNd), molybdenum (Mo), and molybdenumalloy (MoTi), without being limited thereto.

After the gate metal pattern is formed as described above, the GI 520 isformed on the gate metal pattern. In step S410, the GI 520 may be formedof a material, such as silicon nitride (SiN_(x)), silicon oxide (SiO₂),or the like, to a thickness of several thousand A, and may be formed bydepositing tetra-ethyl-ortho-silicate (TEOS) or Middle Temperature Oxide(MTO) by a Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) method.

In step S415, a semiconductor layer is deposited on the GI 520. Thesemiconductor layer is for forming a channel between the sourceelectrode 542 and the drain electrode 544, and may be expressed as anactive layer. The semiconductor layer may formed of amorphous Silicon(a-Si) and an N+ doping layer, or may formed of molybdenum titanium(MoTi) and an N+ doping layer.

In step S420, an S/D metal layer is deposited on the semiconductorlayer, and an S/D metal pattern having a predetermined pattern is formedby a photolithography process and a wet-etching process using a sourcemask.

The S/D metal pattern may include the source electrode 542 and the drainelectrode 544 in the active area, as illustrated in FIGS. 5A to 5E, andis formed as the S/D metal pattern 540 in the passivation hole area ofthe non-active area, as illustrated in the right part of FIG. 5A.

As in the case of the gate metal layer, the S/D metal layer may beformed of one or more materials selected from metals having lowresistance, such as copper (Cu), copper alloy, aluminum (Al), aluminumalloy (AlNd), molybdenum (Mo), and molybdenum alloy (MoTi), withoutbeing limited thereto.

The S/D metal pattern may include the source electrode 542 and the drainelectrode 544 in the active area and the S/D metal pattern 540 in thenon-active area, as illustrated in FIGS. 5A to 5E, and, although notillustrated, may also include data lines in the active area, a data padin the non-active area, and the like.

The above-described source mask may be a half-tone mask or a diffractionmask. When the half-tone mask is used, by using one mask, aphotolithography process, and two etching processes, the S/D metalpattern may be patterned and a semiconductor layer pattern may bepatterned beneath the S/D metal pattern.

For example, after the S/D metal pattern is formed through theabove-described deposition, exposure and wet etching of the S/D metallayer, in step S425, the semiconductor layer pattern illustrated in FIG.5A may be formed by again dry-etching the semiconductor layer.

By process S420 of patterning the S/D metal pattern and the process ofpatterning the semiconductor layer, the semiconductor layer pattern 530and the S/D metal pattern 540 both having a predetermined pattern arealso formed in the passivation hole area of the non-active area, asillustrated in the right part of FIG. 5A.

However, the semiconductor layer pattern 530 may not be formed in thepassivation hole area of the non-active area.

In step S430, a PAS1 is deposited on the entire surface of thesubstrate, and a PAC is deposited on the PAS1 in step S435.

The PAS1 550 may be formed of an inorganic insulating material, such assilicon nitride (SiN_(x)), to a thickness of several thousand Å and maybe formed of a soluble material including silicon (Si), oxygen (O), andcarbon (C), or a material such as silicide, siloxane, polyorganosiloxane, or the like.

A PAC 560 is formed of an organic insulating material havinglight-hardening characteristics, such as photo-acryl, benzocyclobutene(BCB), or the like, on the PAS1 550, and may have a thickness of about 1to 2 μm, without being limited thereto.

Typically, the PAC may be thicker than the PAS1, and the material of thePAS1 may have a large electric resistance and thus has a capacitivecomponent which is large, such as a parasitic capacitance and the likeformed by the upper and lower metal patterns, whereas the photo-acryl,which may be the material of the PAC, does not allow generation of alarge parasitic capacitance.

For example, a reason to use the PAC is that an organic insulatingmaterial, such as photo-acryl, has a relatively small electricresistance and a relatively large permittivity, which reduces generationof parasitic capacitance and thus is advantageous, even when the PAC isformed of the organic insulating material to a larger thickness thanthat of the inorganic passivation layer or inorganic insulating film(PAS). The advantage is that the organic insulation material haslight-hardening characteristics, and thus an organic insulating film,which remains immediately after exposure, development, and etching ofthe organic insulating material without the need to deposit a separatephotoresist, can be directly used as an organic passivation layer,whereas the inorganic passivation layer (PAS) enables proceeding to anext step only after, for the patterning, a photoresist deposited on theinorganic passivation layer (PAS) is completely removed throughexposure, development, etching, removal of the remaining photoresist,and the like.

However, in the case of the PAC, the PAS1 550 is used to preventcontamination of a channel and characteristic degradation of a TFT whichmay occur when adhesion strength between the metal layer (e.g., the S/Dmetal layer) and the semiconductor layer located below the PAC isreduced, and when the organic insulating material contacts thesemiconductor layer material.

In the above-described case, a dual-layer structure of the PAS1 550 andthe PAC 560 may be defined, as one element, to be a lower passivationlayer.

However, as described above, embodiments of the present invention arenot limited to the embodiments in which the lower passivation layerincludes the PAS1 and the PAC, and may also include embodiments in whichthe lower passivation layer includes only one or more inorganicpassivation layers.

Meanwhile, in step S435, the PAS1 550 and the PAC 560 are deposited, andare exposed to light by a photolithography process using a PAC mask andthe like.

Because photo-acryl, which may be the material of the PAC 560, haslight-hardening characteristics, a part of the material of the PAC 560exposed to light by the PAC mask is hardened, and the PAC 560 and thePAS1 located beneath the PAC 560 are patterned by performing dry etchingin this state, in step S440.

It has been described that the PAS1 and the PAC are deposited and thenare simultaneously patterned by using one mask (e.g., the PAC mask) andthe processes of exposure and etching. However, a masking process andprocesses of exposure and etching may be separately performed when aPAS1 and a PAC are patterned. For example, a process of patterning aPAS1 through deposition of the PAS1, and a photolithography process andetching using a PAS mask; and a process of patterning a PAC throughdeposition of the PAC, and a photolithography process and etching usinga PAC mask may be separately performed.

After going through the process of patterning the PAC, as illustrated inFIG. 5B, a first aperture 565 for a drain contact hole is formed at thedrain electrode portion in the TFT area of the active area, andsimultaneously, a second aperture 565′ for a passivation hole accordingto an embodiment of the present invention is formed in the non-activearea.

In step S450, a lower transparent electrode layer is deposited on eachof the first aperture 565 and the second aperture 565′, and then ispatterned.

An embodiment of the present invention may be applied to the LCD deviceof the IPS or FFS type, in which a transparent pixel electrode and atransparent common electrode are simultaneously formed on the arraysubstrate which is a lower substrate. Examples of the FFS-type displaypanel includes a POT-type display panel, in which a transparent pixelelectrode is formed on the uppermost part of the substrate in a state ofinterposing one inter-layer insulating layer, and a VOT-type displaypanel, in which a transparent common voltage electrode (Vcom) is formedon the uppermost part of the substrate.

In FIGS. 5A to 5E, an example of the VOT-type display panel isillustrated, but embodiments of the present invention are not limitedthereto. As illustrated in FIG. 7 and the like, embodiments of thepresent invention may also be applied to the POT-type display panel andthe like.

Accordingly, in an embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5, after a lowertransparent electrode (ITO) layer is deposited and formed, the lowertransparent electrode (ITO) layer is patterned so as to form the pixelelectrode 570′ in the active area, and a lower transparent electrodepattern 570 is formed on the exposed S/D metal pattern so as to contactthe exposed S/D metal pattern in the passivation hole area of thenon-active area.

More specifically, in a state where the drain contact hole aperture 565in the active area and the passivation hole aperture 565′ are formed bythe above-described process of patterning the PAS1 and patterning thePAC, a lower transparent electrode material layer may be deposited onthe entire surface of the substrate. Then, a photoresist is coated on anentire surface of the lower transparent electrode material layer, thecoated photoresist is exposed to light by using a lower transparentelectrode mask having a predetermined pattern formed therein, andwet-etching is performed, thereby forming the pixel electrode pattern570′, which is a lower transparent electrode pattern, and the lowertransparent electrode pattern 570. Specifically, a lower transparentelectrode pattern is formed as a pixel electrode (PXL) pattern in theactive area, and is formed as the lower transparent electrode pattern570 as an S/D cover layer, which covers the S/D metal pattern, in thepassivation hole area of the non-active area (see step S450 and refer toFIG. 5C).

In the present example, the lower transparent electrode material may bea transparent conductive material, for example, Indium Tin Oxide (ITO)or Indium Zinc Oxide (IZO), having a relatively large work functionvalue, without being limited thereto. For convenience, in thisspecification, a transparent electrode material or a transparentelectrode layer will be representatively described as ITO.

As described above, differently from the example illustrated in FIGS. 2Ato 2D, the lower transparent electrode pattern is also formed in thepassivation hole area of the non-active area when the lower transparentelectrode pattern is patterned (which becomes the pixel electrode layerin the active area in the VOT-type display panel).

In a process of forming a passivation hole having a structure asillustrated in FIGS. 2A to 2D, a mask for patterning a pixel electrodelayer may not have a particular pattern formed therein in a passivationhole area of a non-active area, and thus, a lower transparent electrodepattern may not be formed in the passivation hole area. In contrast, inan embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 5A to 5E, a lower transparentelectrode mask or a pixel electrode mask used during patterning a lowertransparent electrode have a predetermined pattern corresponding to apassivation hole in even a passivation hole area of a non-active area,and thus allow patterning to be performed so as to form the lowertransparent electrode pattern 570 as a cover layer, which covers theexposed S/D metal pattern 540, in even the passivation hole area of thenon-active area.

The lower transparent electrode pattern 570 in the passivation hole areaserves as a junction layer between the S/D metal pattern 540 locatedbeneath the lower transparent electrode pattern 570 and an upperpassivation layer (PAS2) located on the S/D metal pattern 540.Accordingly, it may be possible to solve the problems in FIGS. 2A to 2Dcaused due to the lack of adhesion strength of the S/D metal pattern andan upper passivation layer located above the S/D metal pattern.

After the process of patterning the pixel electrode pattern 570′ and thelower transparent electrode pattern 570, a PAS2 580, which is an upperpassivation layer, may be patterned on the entire surface of thesubstrate (see step S455 and refer to FIG. 5D). In other words, a layerof an inorganic insulating material, such as silicon nitride (SiN_(x)),is deposited, and a PAS2 pattern having a predetermined pattern isformed by a photolithography process and a dry etching process using apassivation layer mask.

In step S460, a common voltage electrode pattern, which is an uppertransparent electrode layer, is formed on the PAS2. For example, a layerof a transparent conductive material, such as Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) orIndium Zinc Oxide (IZO), is deposited on the entire surface of thesubstrate, and then a common electrode (Vcom) pattern 590 in the activearea is formed by exposure and wet etching using an upper transparentelectrode mask or a common electrode mask. The common electrode (Vcom)pattern 590 may have a finger shape for each pixel, as illustrated inFIG. 5E.

Meanwhile, a passivation hole defined in embodiments of the presentinvention is defined as including all apertures, all holes, and allcontact holes which are opened by removing a part of a passivation layerlocated on a part at which the S/D metal pattern is formed in thenon-active area of the array substrate. An additional layer, such asanother passivation layer and the like, may be formed in such an areaopened by removing the part of the passivation layer.

Purposes of the passivation hole may include measuring a size, measuringan electrical characteristic of an S/D metal pattern, configuring a partof a static electricity prevention circuit, and the like, without beinglimited thereto.

The respective example purposes are described in more detail as follows.A drain contact hole is formed for exposing a drain electrode includedin a TFT in the active area, and it may be necessary to preciselymeasure the size of the drain contact hole. However, the drain contacthole has a small size, and is formed for each of numerous pixels, andthus it may be difficult to accurately measure sizes of all the draincontact holes. To this end, a passivation hole may be used. Asillustrated in FIGS. 5A to 5E, a passivation hole of the non-active areais formed by a process identical to that of forming the drain contacthole in the active area, and a passivation contact hole has a largersize than that of the drain contact hole. Accordingly, when an actualsize of the passivation hole against a target size thereof is measured,it is possible to know the degree of precision of the process. Becausethe degree of precision is identical to that of the process of formingthe drain contact hole, it is possible to measure the size (criticaldimension) of the drain contact hole.

Meanwhile, the S/D metal pattern may be formed in the passivation holearea, and a part, which needs the S/D metal pattern in the non-activearea as described above, is the part connected to a gate metal pattern.Examples of the part include a part connecting a common electrode line(Vcom line) to the active area, a part connecting a gate pad to a gateline in the active area, a part connecting data Integrated Circuit (IC)to a data line in the active area, and the like. As described above, ineven the non-active area, there may be many cases in which an apertureneeds to be formed above the S/D metal pattern, and the aperture enablesthe measurement of an electrical characteristic of an S/D metal layer.

In addition, the passivation hole may be used for a dummy pattern formeasurement of an electrical characteristic (inserted into a panelportion other than the active area and a mother glass substrate), apattern for size measurement in which there is an area where layersoverlap (e.g., S/D and a PAC), and the like.

Also, the static electricity prevention circuit existing in thenon-active area, for example, in a form in which three transistors areconnected to each other, needs an aperture for exposing the S/D metalpattern to the outside, and thus a passivation layer aperture accordingto an embodiment of the present invention may be used in this case.

Meanwhile, the entire process of manufacturing the array substrateaccording to an embodiment of the present invention as illustrated inFIG. 4 will be summarized below.

Performed are process S405 and S410 of forming a gate metal pattern onthe substrate and forming a GI on the gate metal pattern; process S415,S420 and S425 of depositing a semiconductor layer and an S/D layer andforming an S/D metal pattern in both an active area and a non-activearea by a photolithography process using one more masks; and processS430, S435 and S440 of depositing a PAS1 and a PAC, which are a lowerpassivation layer, and forming a passivation hole by removing a part ofthe lower passivation layer in a passivation hole area.

In addition, the entire process may include the lower transparentelectrode patterning process S450 of depositing a pixel electrode layer,which is a lower transparent electrode layer, and forming a lowertransparent electrode pattern as an S/D cover layer on the S/D metalpattern in the passivation hole area by using a lower transparentelectrode mask; and a process of forming a PAS2, which is an upperpassivation layer, on the entire surface on the lower transparentelectrode pattern.

FIGS. 6A and 6B are plan views illustrating an array substratemanufactured according to an embodiment of the present invention, andFIGS. 6C and 6D are cross-sectional views illustrating the arraysubstrate manufactured according to an embodiment of the presentinvention.

As illustrated in FIG. 6A, one or more passivation holes 600 are formedin the non-active area of the array substrate, and the lower transparentelectrode pattern 570 as an S/D cover layer is formed in an area of theone or more passivation holes 600 as described above. For example, thelower transparent electrode pattern 570, which may be formed by aprocess identical to that of forming a pixel transparent electrode (PXLITO), is formed between an S/D metal pattern of the passivation hole 600and the passivation layer located above the S/D metal pattern.Accordingly, the lower transparent electrode pattern 570 may serve toprevent a delamination phenomenon of the passivation layer and aphenomenon in which a foreign material is generated.

At this time, the lower transparent electrode pattern 570 may be widelypatterned in such a manner as to completely cover an entire areaincluding the multiple passivation holes 600 s, as illustrated in FIG.6A. Alternatively, the lower transparent electrode pattern 570 may bepatterned in such a manner as to separate each passivation hole 600 fromanother passivation hole, as illustrated in FIG. 6B.

Meanwhile, a cross section of a passivation hole, which exists in thenon-active area of the array substrate manufactured according to anembodiment of the present invention, is described as follows. Withreference to FIG. 6C, the S/D metal pattern 540 formed below thepassivation hole is located, and the lower transparent electrode pattern570 is formed on the S/D metal pattern 540, which is exposed by removingthe PAS1 550 and the PAC 560 formed on the S/D metal pattern 540, andthe PAS2 580, which is an upper passivation layer, is formed on thelower transparent electrode pattern 570. Accordingly, as illustrated inFIG. 6D, even when an oxide film 540′ is formed on the S/D metal pattern540 exposed by a process of dry-etching an organic passivation layer andthe like, the lower transparent electrode pattern 570 of a conductivematerial formed on the oxide film 540′ serves as a kind of contactmediation layer. Accordingly, it is possible to improve adhesionstrength of the S/D metal pattern 540 and the PAS2 580 located above theS/D metal pattern 540.

Therefore, it is possible to suppress the delamination phenomenon of theupper passivation layer caused by the structure illustrated in FIGS. 2Ato 2D, for example, the structure in which the S/D metal patterndirectly contacts the upper passivation layer in the passivation holearea, the generation of failure due to a passivation foreign materialaccording to the occurrence of the delamination phenomenon, and thelike.

Hereinabove, a lower transparent electrode pattern, which is an S/Dcover layer existing in the passivation hole area of the non-active areaof the display panel, has been described as being formed as a pixeltransparent electrode layer (PXL ITO). Alternatively, the lowertransparent electrode pattern may be formed as a common electrode layer(Vcom ITO).

FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view illustrating an example passivationhole area according to an embodiment of the present invention applied toan LCD device of a POT type.

With reference to FIG. 7, in the POT-type display panel in which atransparent pixel electrode is formed on the uppermost part of thesubstrate, a Vcom ITO pattern 670′, which is a transparent electrode fora common voltage, may be patterned on a PAS1 and a PAC, and a commonvoltage transparent electrode pattern 670 is formed as a lowertransparent electrode pattern in a passivation hole area by a processidentical to the above-described process. The common voltage transparentelectrode pattern 670, which is a Vcom ITO layer, serves as a coverlayer of an S/D metal pattern, and thus can improve adhesion strength ofthe S/D metal pattern and an upper passivation layer (PAS2) as describedabove.

Meanwhile, in the case of the VOT-type array substrate illustrated inFIG. 4 through FIGS. 6A to 6D, dry etching may be performed after(light) exposure in order to selectively remove a PAS1 and a PAC. Incontrast, the POT-type array substrate illustrated in FIG. 7 may beslightly different from the VOT-type array substrate, due to a processof performing development immediately after exposure in order toselectively remove a PAS1 and a PAC.

At this time, the oxidation of an S/D metal pattern exposed to plasma inthe dry etching process may be more active than in the developmentprocess. In this regard, adhesion strength of an upper passivation layer(PAS2) at a passivation hole may be more severely reduced in theVOT-type display panel illustrated in FIG. 5 than in the POT-typedisplay panel illustrated in FIG. 7. Accordingly, embodiments of thepresent invention may be more usefully utilized.

However, the oxidation of an S/D metal pattern may not always occur onlyin the dry etching process, and thus, embodiments of the presentinvention may be applied even to the POT-type display panel illustratedin FIG. 7.

Also, although the oxidation of a metal pattern may not occur, the S/Dmetal pattern directly contacts the PAS2 different in kind from the S/Dmetal pattern in the passivation hole area, so that adhesion strengthbetween the S/D metal pattern and the PAS2 may be reduced. Therefore,according to another embodiment of the present invention illustrated inFIG. 7, a lower transparent electrode pattern (e.g., a Vcom ITO layer)is disposed between the S/D metal pattern and the upper passivationlayer (PAS2), and thereby inter-layer adhesion strength can be improved.

The above-described respective embodiments of the present invention arenot necessarily applied only to the array substrate for the LCD device,and may be applied to all types of substrates for a display device, inwhich an inorganic passivation layer located on a predetermined metalpattern directly contacts the predetermined metal pattern in a hole areaor a contact hole area of a non-active area and thereby adhesionstrength between the inorganic passivation layer and the predeterminedmetal pattern may be weakened. For example, the above-describedrespective embodiments of the present invention may be applied to allarray substrates for an OLED display device, a PDP display device, andthe like.

As described above, according to various embodiments of the presentinvention, a transparent electrode pattern (e.g., ITO) may be formedbetween an S/D metal pattern and a passivation layer located above theS/D metal pattern, which are formed in the passivation hole area of thenon-active area of the array substrate for the display panel.Accordingly, it may be possible to prevent a delamination phenomenon ofthe passivation layer and a peel-off phenomenon of a passivation foreignmaterial in the passivation hole area.

Further, in an area of a PAS hole or a PAC hole formed on an S/D metalpattern, a transparent electrode pattern for increasing adhesivestrength may be formed between the S/D metal pattern and a passivationlayer located above the S/D metal pattern. Accordingly, it may bepossible to prevent display failure caused by a delamination phenomenonand a peel-off phenomenon of a passivation layer material due to thelack of adhesion strength between a metal pattern and a passivationlayer in the passivation hole area.

For example, in a display panel where an organic passivation layer (PAC)of an organic material, such as photo-acryl or the like, is used and apixel transparent electrode and a common voltage transparent electrodeare simultaneously disposed on an array substrate, a transparentelectrode pattern may be formed between an S/D metal layer and apassivation layer located above the S/D metal layer existing apassivation hole (PAC hole) area of a non-active area. Accordingly,various problems may be solved which occur when an oxide layer is formedon the S/D metal layer existing in a pad for measurement during aprocess of dry-etching the PAC, and thus adhesion strength of the metallayer and a passivation layer located above the metal layer is weakened.As a result, it may be possible to increase yield of liquid crystaldisplay panels, and a reduction in failure rate thereof.

According to a result of testing the degree of generation of a hot pixelin a display panel to which an embodiment of the present invention maybe applied, as shown in Table 1 below, a generation rate of a hot pixelin an active area reaches 9.08% in a structure where an S/D metalpattern directly contacts a passivation layer (PAS2) located on the S/Dmetal pattern in a passivation hole area as illustrated in FIGS. 2A to2D. However, a hot pixel was not generated at all in a case where apixel transparent electrode (ITO) pattern is formed as an S/D coverlayer between an S/D metal pattern and an upper passivation layer PAS2in a passivation hole area by applying the configuration illustrated inFIGS. 5A to 5E among embodiments of the present invention.

TABLE 1 Embodiment of present Structure of FIGS. invention (FIGS. 5A to5E) 2A to 2D (Direct (Formation of PXL covering contact between PTNbetween S/D pattern & S/D pattern & PAS2) PAS2 layer) Generation rate9.08% 0.00% of hot pixel

While the technical spirit of the present invention has been describedby example with reference to the accompanying drawings, it will beunderstood by a person skilled in the art that the present invention maybe varied and modified in various forms without departing from the scopeof the present invention. Accordingly, the embodiments disclosed in thepresent invention are not to limit but merely to describe the technicalspirit of the present invention. Further, the scope of the technicalspirit of the present invention is not limited by the describedembodiments. The scope of the present invention shall be construed onthe basis of the accompanying claims in such a manner that all of thetechnical ideas included within the scope equivalent to the claimsbelong to the present invention.

What is claimed is:
 1. An array substrate for a display device,comprising: an active area including a thin film transistor area, thethin film transistor area including a thin film transistor; and anon-active area including a passivation hole area having: a gateinsulator; a source/drain metal pattern; a lower transparent electrodepattern; and an upper passivation layer, wherein the gate insulator, thesource/drain metal pattern, the lower transparent electrode pattern, andthe upper passivation layer are sequentially disposed.
 2. The arraysubstrate according to claim 1, wherein the active area including thethin film transistor area further includes a gate metal pattern, thegate insulator, a semiconductor layer, the source/drain metal pattern, alower passivation layer, a lower transparent electrode layer, the upperpassivation layer, and an upper transparent electrode layer that aresequentially disposed.
 3. The array substrate according to claim 1,wherein in the non-active area including the passivation hole area, thelower transparent electrode pattern is provided as a cover layer of thesource/drain metal pattern.
 4. The array substrate according to claim 2,wherein the lower transparent electrode pattern and the lowertransparent electrode layer are formed as a same layer.
 5. The arraysubstrate according to claim 1, further comprising: a lower passivationlayer on the source/drain metal pattern in the passivation hole area,wherein the lower passivation layer includes one or more organicpassivation layers, one or more inorganic passivation layers, or adouble passivation layer including an organic passivation layer and aninorganic passivation layer.
 6. The array substrate according to claim2, wherein: each of the upper passivation layer and the lowerpassivation layer is formed of an organic material or an inorganicmaterial; the organic material is photo-acryl, acrylate, or polyamide;and the inorganic material is silicon nitride or silicon oxide.
 7. Thearray substrate according to claim 2, further comprising: a commonvoltage electrode disposed on the lower passivation layer in the activearea, wherein the common voltage electrode and the lower transparentelectrode pattern are formed as a same layer.
 8. The array substrateaccording to claim 2, wherein each of the source/drain metal pattern andthe gate metal pattern is formed of one or more materials selected fromcopper, copper alloy, aluminum, aluminum alloy, molybdenum, andmolybdenum alloy.
 9. The array substrate according to claim 1, whereinin the non-active area including the passivation hole area, asemiconductor layer is disposed between the gate insulator and thesource/drain metal pattern.
 10. The array substrate according to claim2, wherein the source/drain metal pattern formed in the active areaincludes a source electrode and a drain electrode.
 11. The arraysubstrate according to claim 10, wherein the semiconductor layer isdisposed to form a channel between the source electrode and the drainelectrode.
 12. The array substrate according to claim 5, wherein in thedouble passivation layer, the organic passivation layer is thicker thanthe inorganic passivation layer.
 13. The array substrate according toclaim 1, wherein the non-active area including the passivation hole areafurther comprises: a lower passivation layer on the source/drain metalpattern; a passivation hole in the lower passivation layer at thesource/drain metal pattern, whereby the lower transparent electrodepattern directly contacts the source/drain metal pattern in thepassivation hole.
 14. The array substrate according to claim 2, whereinin the active area including the thin film transistor area, the lowertransparent electrode layer is disposed to form a pixel electrode.
 15. Amethod of manufacturing an array substrate for a display device,comprising: providing an array substrate including: an active areaincluding a thin film transistor area; and a non-active area including apassivation hole area; forming a gate insulator, a source/drain metalpattern, and a lower passivation layer in sequence in the passivationhole area included in the non-active area; exposing the source/drainmetal pattern by removing a part of the lower passivation layer in thepassivation hole area; forming a lower transparent electrode pattern onthe exposed source/drain metal pattern in the passivation hole area; andforming an upper passivation layer on the lower transparent electrodepattern in the passivation hole area.
 16. A method of manufacturing anarray substrate for a display device, comprising: providing an arraysubstrate including: an active area including the thin film transistorarea; and a non-active area including a passivation hole area; forming agate metal pattern on the array substrate; forming a gate insulator onthe gate metal pattern; depositing a semiconductor layer and asource/drain layer on the gate insulator; forming a source/drain metalpattern in both the active area and the non-active area; depositing alower passivation layer in both the active area and the non-active area;forming the passivation hole by removing a part of the lower passivationlayer in the passivation hole area; depositing a lower transparentelectrode layer in both the active area and the non-active area;patterning the lower transparent electrode layer to form the lowertransparent electrode pattern on the source/drain metal pattern in thepassivation hole area; and forming an upper passivation layer in boththe active area and the non-active area.
 17. The method according toclaim 15, wherein when the forming lower transparent electrode patternin the passivation hole area, the lower transparent electrode layer inthe active layer is patterned to form a pixel electrode.
 18. The methodaccording to claim 16, wherein when the forming lower transparentelectrode pattern in the passivation hole area, the lower transparentelectrode layer in the active layer is patterned to form a pixelelectrode.
 19. The method according to claim 15, wherein the lowertransparent electrode pattern is formed in the passivation hole area asa source/drain cover layer on the exposed source/drain metal pattern.20. The method according to claim 16, wherein the lower transparentelectrode pattern is formed in the passivation hole area as asource/drain cover layer on the exposed source/drain metal pattern. 21.The method according to claim 15, further comprising: forming an uppertransparent electrode layer on the upper passivation layer in the activearea.
 22. The method according to claim 16, further comprising: formingan upper transparent electrode layer on the upper passivation layer inthe active area.
 23. The method according to claim 15, wherein the lowerpassivation layer is formed by employing one or more organic passivationlayers, one or more inorganic passivation layers, or a doublepassivation layer including an organic passivation layer and aninorganic passivation layer.
 24. The method according to claim 16,wherein the lower passivation layer is formed by employing one or moreorganic passivation layers, one or more inorganic passivation layers, ora double passivation layer including an organic passivation layer and aninorganic passivation layer.
 25. The method according to claim 15,wherein forming the passivation hole comprises: etching a portion of thelower passivation layer corresponding to the passivation hole to exposethe source/drain metal pattern.
 26. The method according to claim 16,wherein forming the passivation hole comprises: etching a portion of thelower passivation layer corresponding to the passivation hole to exposethe source/drain metal pattern.
 27. The method according to claim 15,wherein the source/drain metal pattern forms a source electrode and adrain electrode.
 28. The method according to claim 16, wherein thesource/drain metal pattern forms a source electrode and a drainelectrode.
 29. The method according to claim 16, wherein: thesource/drain metal pattern formed in the active area forms a sourceelectrode and a drain electrode; and the semiconductor layer isdeposited to form a channel between the source electrode and the drainelectrode.
 30. The method according to claim 15, wherein in thepassivation hole area, the lower transparent electrode pattern is formedto directly contact the source/drain metal pattern.
 31. The methodaccording to claim 16, wherein in the passivation hole area, the lowertransparent electrode pattern is formed to directly contact thesource/drain metal pattern.